2009 09 10 ref Classic evidence of behavioralmodernity includes finely made stone tool tools ... They further dispute that anatomical modernity predates behavioralmodernity, stating that changes in human anatomy and behavioral changes occurred stepwise. ref name norevolution The findings of Curtis ... Python Cave Reveals Oldest Human Ritual, Scientists Suggest DEFAULTSORT BehavioralModernity ... of the evidence is the behavioral B s blades, beads, burials, bone toolmaking, and beauty. ref cite ... more details
see also Modernism Modern Age Sociology Modernity typically refers to a post traditional , post medieval ... constituent institutions and forms of surveillance Barker 2005, 444 . Conceptually, modernity relates ... a specific movement in Western philosophy, modernity tends to refer only to the social relations associated with the rise of capitalism. Modernity may also refer to tendencies in intellectual culture ..., modernity has been associated with cultural and intellectual movements of 1436 1789 and extending ... and art istic quarrel among the Acad mie fran aise in the early 1690s. From these usages, modernity ... of historical origin. Moreover, the distinction between modernity and modern did not arise until the 19th century Delanty 2007 . Phases of modernity According to one of Marshall Berman s books Berman .... , modernity is periodized into three conventional phases dubbed Early, Classical, and Late, respectively, by Peter Osborne 1992, 25 Early modern period Early modernity 1500 1789 or 1453 1789 in traditional historiography Classical modernity 1789 1900 corresponding to the Long 19th century 1789 1914 in Eric Hobsbawm Hobsbawm s scheme Late modernity 1900 1989 Some authors, such as Jean Fran ois Lyotard Lyotard and Jean Baudrillard Baudrillard , believe that modernity ended in the mid or late 20th century and thus have defined a period subsequent to modernity, namely Postmodernity 1930s 1950s ... to be merely another phase of modernity this phase is called Liquid modernity Liquid modernity by Zygmunt Bauman Bauman or High modernity by Giddens see Postmodernity Descriptions Descriptions of postmodernity . Defining modernity Politically Politically, modernity s earliest phase starts with Niccol ... that arose in direct response to the social problems of modernity Harriss 2000, 325 , the term most ... . In the most basic terms, Anthony Giddens describes modernity as blockquote ...a shorthand .... Largely as a result of these characteristics, modernity is vastly more dynamic than any previous ... more details
distinguish Late Modernism Sociology Cleanup date May 2010 Late modernity or liquid modernity is a term that has been used to describe the condition or state of some highly developed present day society societies . It regards their state as a continuation or social development development of modernity , rather than as a distinct new state, post modernity . A number of social theory social theorists Beck 1992, Giddens 1991, Lash 1990 critique the idea that some contemporary societies have moved into a new stage of development or postmodernity . On technological change technological and social change s since the 1960s, the concept of late modernity proposes that contemporary societies are a clear continuation of modernity modern institutional transitions and cultural developments. The three authors talk about a reflexive modernization process, as modernity now tends to be self referring, instead of it being defined as opposed to traditionalism, like the first modernity. Anthony Giddens does not dispute that important changes have occurred, but he argues that we have not truly abandoned modernity. Rather, the modernity of contemporary society is a developed, radicalized, late modernity but still modernity, not postmodernity. Zygmunt Bauman who introduced the idea of liquid modernity wrote that its characteristics are the privatization of ambivalence and increasing feelings of uncertainty. It is a kind of chaotic continuation of modernity, where one can shift from one social position to another, in a fluid manner. Nomadism becomes a general trait of the liquid modern man, as he flows through his own life like a tourist, changing places, jobs, spouses, values and sometimes even .... See also information society network society post industrial society second modernity reflexive modernization References Zygmunt Bauman Bauman, Zygmunt , Liquid Modernity . Cambridge Polity Press .... Risk Society . SAGE Publications. Giddens, Anthony. 1991. The Consequences of Modernity . Stanford ... more details
Infobox journal title Modernism modernity cover Image Modernism modernity.gif editor Cassandra Laity, Lawrence Rainey, Jeffrey Schnapp discipline Literature , Humanities abbreviation Modernism modernity publisher Johns Hopkins University Press country United States frequency Quarterly history 1994 present openaccess impact impact year website http msa.press.jhu.edu journal link1 http muse.jhu.edu journals modernism modernity link1 name Online access link2 link2 name JSTOR OCLC 28689804 LCCN CODEN ISSN 1071 6068 eISSN 1080 6601 Modernism modernity is a peer review peer reviewed academic journal founded in 1994 by Lawrence Rainey and Robert van Hallberg. Since 2001 it has been the official publication of the Modernist Studies Association and each September issue presents papers from their annual conference. The journal is interdisciplinary, linking music, architecture, the visual arts, literature, and social and intellectual history in the field and period of modernism . Each issue has around seven essays on various topics. The journal occasionally has special issues, with a series of related essays on one topic. The journal recently launched an Out of the Archives series, in which out of print and neglected works of modernism are reintroduced to its readership to promote a deeper and wider knowledge of modernism. Each issue has a review essay, which reviews several books in combination and is around 5,000 words, and forty pages of book reviews. The journal is published quarterly in January, April, September, and November by the Johns Hopkins University Press . Circulation is around 1,200 and the average length of an issue is 192 pages. The current editor in chief editors are Cassandra ... University . In 2003, Modernism modernity won the Phoenix Award from the Council of Editors of Learned ... journals modernism modernity Modernism modernity on the JHU Press website http muse.jhu.edu journals modernism modernity Modernism modernity at Project MUSE Category Modernism Category Publications ... more details
Refimprove date February 2010 Second modernity is a phrase coined by the Germany German Sociology sociologist Ulrich Beck , and is his word for the period after modernity . Re modernity is a renaissance of modernity through realization that not all risks can be controlled. Family, politics, science, and religion were all institutions that promised protection from risks both natural risks earthquakes, floods, pandemics, environmental issues and social risks unemployment, divorce . Citation needed date February 2010 In second modernity these systems become part of the problem, not the solution, since they cannot offer the same social integration as they did prior to the 1960s. Citation needed date February 2010 Finally realising that this is the case, people can reassess the situation and try to come up with new solutions that better reflect the changes brought by this reflexive modernization . The solution according to Ulrich Beck, though, is a cosmopolitan realpolitik in which the dilemma that national interests can no longer be promoted nationally is recognised Beck 2006, 173 . See also Late modernity Reflexive modernization Postmodernity Great Recession , often seen as a failure of modern capitalism Nanotechnology , a possible second Industrial Revolution References Beck, Ulrich. 2006. The Cosmopolitan Vision , translated by Ciaran Cronin. Cambridge, UK Malden, MA Polity Press. ISBN 0745633986 cloth ISBN 0745633994 pbk . socio stub Category Historiography de Zweite Moderne Category Postmodernity theory ... more details
Refimprove date April 2010 Expert subject Islam date February 2009 Islam Islam and modernity is a topic of discussion in contemporary sociology of religion . Neither Islam nor modernity are simple or unified entities. They are abstract quantities which could not be reduced into simple categories. The history of Islam , like that of other religions, is a history of different interpretations and approaches ... needed date May 2010 Similarly, modernity is a complex and multidimensional phenomenon rather than ... Soroush ref Islam s First Encounters with European Modernity In the 18th century Europe was undergoing ... in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Islamic modernists argued that Islam and modernity were ... was the first Muslim country where modernity surfaced, with major shifts in scientific and legal thought ... modernity continued from the same trajectory before the great war. This was especially the case ..., Modernity and the proliferation of Islamic fundamentalism Essay like date December 2007 In recent ... East , who are voicing their dislike of concepts such as democracy and modernity. This is due to the fact that democracy and modernity as concepts in the Middle East , are most commonly ..., there is not necessarily a problem as such with modernity, however, the problem is when modernity ... above, the secular values and beliefs associated with concepts such as modernity. ref Ayubi ... a afzaal 20060316 IslamModernity.pdf Islam and Modernity by Prof. Ahmed Afzaal http www.siiaonline.org scm articles islam and modernity final.pdf Islam and Modernity by Professor Ibrahim Abu Rabi http news.bbc.co.uk 2 hi middle east 1679397.stm BBC NEWS Analysis Islam s modernity question http search.eb.com ... Islam , Oxford University Press 2001. John Cooper, Ronald Nettler and Mohamad Mahmoud, Islam and Modernity ... , Oxford University Press 1998. Islam and Modernity, Journal Religion and the Arts , Brill Academic Publishers, Volume 5, Number 4, pp.  495 503 DEFAULTSORT Islam And Modernity Category Islamic ... more details
Expert subject psychology date February 2009 In psychology behavioral health , as a general concept, refers to the reciprocal relationship between human behavior , individually or socially, and the well being of the body, mind, and spirit, whether the latter are considered individually or as an integrated whole. The term is more commonly used to describe a field of scientific study, academic proficiency and clinical healthcare practice. Like similar terms such as mental health and physical health , behavioral health is a basic English term which derives its meaning from the simple association between noun and adjective. Normal variations in the definition of such terms may be expected, given common variations seen in the component words, behavioral and health . When the term is employed in the scientific or clinical sense, variations in the focus, if not the meaning of the term, have been observed. In 1978 the term behavioral medicine was formally introduced and described as blockquote the interdisciplinary field concerned with the development and integration of behavioral and biomedical science, knowledge and techniques relevant to health and illness and the application of this knowledge and these techniques to prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation. ref Schwartz, G.E. & Weiss, S.M. 1978 . Behavioral medicine revisited An amended definition. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 1, 249 251. ref blockquote In 1979 behavioral health emerged as that aspect of behavioral medicine blockquote promoting a philosophy of health that stresses individual responsibility in the application of behavioral and biomedical science, knowledge and techniques to the maintenance of health ... activities. ref Matarazzo, J.D. 1980 . Behavioral health and behavioral medicine Frontiers for a new health psychology. American Psychologist, 35, 807 817. ref blockquote Unlike its progenitor, behavioral medicine, the emphasis of behavioral health had been placed squarely in the arena of health maintenance ... more details
neuropsychology Behavioral neurology is a subspecialty of neurology that studies the neurological basis of behavior, memory, and cognition, the impact of neurological damage and disease upon these functions, and the treatment thereof. Two fields associated with behavioral neurology are neuropsychiatry and neuropsychology . In the United States , Behavioral Neurology and Neuropsychiatry has been recognized as a single subspecialty by the United Council for Neurologic Subspecialties UCNS since 2004. Behavioral neurology is that speciality of one, which deals with the study of neurological basis of behavior, memory, and cognition, and their impact of damage and disease and treatment. Syndromes and diseases commonly studied by behavioral neurology include but are not limited to div style column count 2 moz column count 2 webkit column count 2 Agraphia Agnosia s graphesthesia Agraphesthesia Alexia disorder Amnesia s Anosognosia Aphasia s Apraxia s Aprosodias Dementia s Dyslexia s Epilepsy Hemispatial neglect Hemispatial Neglect Stroke Traumatic Brain Injury div History While descriptions of behavioral syndromes go back to the ancient Greeks and Egyptians, it was during the 19th century that behavioral neurology began to arise, first with the primitive localization theories of Franz Gall ... put a damper on localization theory and lesion models of behavioral function. In the United States, the work of Norman Geschwind led to a renaissance of behavioral neurology. Geschwind is famous for his work on disconnection syndromes and his legacy lives on through the generations of behavioral neurologists ... a tool that allowed for lesion, structural, and functional correlations with behavioral dysfunction in living people. References cite journal author Benson DF title The history of behavioral neurology ..., Todd E. Feinberg Behavioral Neurology and Neuropsychology McGraw Hill Professional Publishing 1st edition ... for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurology Neuroscience Category Neurology fr Neurologie comportementale ... more details
missing citations date May 2007 Behavioral medicine is an interdisciplinary field of medicine concerned with the development and integration of knowledge in the biological, behavioral, psychological, and social sciences relevant to health and illness . The term is often used interchangeably, and incorrectly, with health psychology , whereas the practice of behavioral medicine also includes applied psychophysiological therapies such as biofeedback , hypnosis , and biobehavioral therapy of physical disorders, aspects of occupational therapy , rehabilitation medicine , and physiatry , as well as preventive medicine . One of its academic forebears is the field of psychosomatic medicine . Practitioners of behavioral medicine include appropriately qualified nurses, psychologists, and physicians. More recently, it has expanded its area of practice to interventions with providers of medical services, in recognition of the fact that the behavior of providers can have a determinative effect on patients outcomes. For example, there exists a large interest in communication behaviors between clinician and patient within the field. Other areas include correcting perceptual bias in diagnostic behavior remediating clinicians attitudes that impinge negatively upon patient treatment and addressing clinicians behaviors that promote disease development and illness maintenance in patients, whether within a malpractice framework or not. The International Society of Behavioral Medicine is the leading non profit organization in the field, with many national daughter organizations. Their yearly conferences ..., Fitness and Behavioral Medicine http www.baojournal.com BAO Journal of Behavioral Health and Medicine ... has a special interest group devoted to behavioral medicine http www.abainternational.org Special Interests si.asp External links http www.sbm.org Society of Behavioral Medicine home page http www.springer.com 10865 Journal of Behavioral Medicine Psychiatry Category Psychiatric models Mental health ... more details
Behavioral Communication is a psychological construct that addresses people s use of day to day behaviors as a form of communication. Specifically, it refers to people s tendency to express feelings, needs, and thoughts by means of indirect messages and behavioral impacts. Basically, any behavior or its absence when one is expected may be judged as communicative if it has the intent to convey a message. For example, an expressive hairstyle, a show of a certain emotion, stonewalling emotional withdrawal , or simply doing or not doing the dishes all can be means by which people may convey messages to each other. The construct of behavioral communication is conceived as a variable of Individual differences . This means that some people more than others tend to engage in behavioral communication in spite of the plausible alternatives of using Linguistics verbal communication . A measure of the construct, The Behavioral Communication Questionnaire M. Ivanov, 2008 , has been introduced at the Society for Personality Assessment conference in March, 2008. The conceptual framework of the construct has been presented at Western Psychological Association Conference in April, 2008. In March 2010, a manuscript detailing the construct and its measurement has been accepted for publication by the journal of Personality and Individual Differences , an official scientific journal for the International Society for the Study of Individual Differences . This manuscript is authored by Michael Ivanov ... citation of this article in press Ivanov, M., & Werner, P. D. Behavioral communication Individual ... A second phase of the research into behavioral communication will begin in a late spring of 2010. In this study, the role of behavioral communication will be explored within a context of romantic ... for the construct of behavioral communication. http psyresearch.org behavioralcommunication PsyResearch.org ... in the first study 2006 2007 of behavioral communication. Category Communication psych stub ... more details
In behavioral science, system theory and dynamic systems modeling, a behavioral model reproduces the required behavior of the original analyzed system , such as there is a one to one correspondence between the behavior of the original system and the simulated system. That namely implies that the model uniquely predicts future system states from past systems states. The behavioral approach is motivated by the aim of obtaining a framework for system analysis that respects the underlying physics and sets up the appropriate mathematical concepts from there. A key question of the behavioral approach is whether a quantity w1 can be deduced given an observed quantity w2 and a Model abstract model . If w2 can be deduced given w1 and the model, w2 is said to be observability observable . In terms of mathematical modeling, the to be deduced quantity or Variable mathematics variable is often referred to as the latent variable and the observed variable is the manifest variable. Such a system is then called an observable latent variable system. The above system theory system theoretic definition, underlies to some degree most current usages of the term behavioral model . More specifically, the term behavioral modeling is also encountered in the following fields In Behavioral modeling in computer aided design computer aided design , it designates a circuit modeling technique References J.W. Polderman and J.C. Willems, 1998. Introduction to Mathematical Systems Theory A Behavioral Approach , 424 pages, Springer, New York. Paolo Rapisarda and Jan C.Willems, 2006. http www ics.acs.i.kyoto u.ac.jp mtns06 abstracts rw2.pdf Recent Developments in Behavioral System Theory , July 24 28, 2006, MTNS 2006, Kyoto, Japan Category Systems theory Category Dynamical systems Systemstheory stub bg fr Mod lisation comportementale ... more details
Behavioral activation is a third generation behavior therapy for treating major depressive disorder depression ... underpinnings Behavioral activation emerged from a component analysis of cognitive behavioral ... behavioral treatment for depression. journal Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology volume 64 pages 295 304 pmid 8871414 doi 10.1037 0022 006X.64.2.295 issue 2 ref The behavioral component had ... . The behavioral study and treatment of depression. In M. Hersen, R.M., Eisler, & P.M. Miller Eds. , Progress in behavioral modification Vol. 1, pp. 19 65 . New York Academic. ref and thus a group of behaviorists decided that it might be more efficient to pursue a purer behavioral treatment for the disorder ... and reduce punishment. The theoretical underpinnings of behavioral activation ref Jacobson, N.S., Martell, C.R., & Dimidjian, S. 2001 . Behavioral Activation for depression Returning to contextual ... to determine long term patterns which may lead to dysthymia . Methods The behavioral activation ..., J.P., Hopko, S.D., & McNeil, D.W. year 2004 title A Brief Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression ... behavioral activation treatment were markedly superior to those of the persons in the control group ... . Behavioral Activation Treatment for Major Depressive Disorder A Pilot Investigation The Behavior ... Review of Behavioral Activation Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder. The Behavior Analyst Today , 7 4 , 508 518 http www.baojournal.com ref Research support A recent review of behavioral activation ... treatment. ref name spates pagoto kalata 2006 A large scale treatment study found behavioral ... depression. ref cite journal author Dimidjian, S., et al. year 2006 title Randomized Trial of Behavioral ... 670 pmid 16881773 doi 10.1037 0022 006X.74.4.658 issue 4 ref Recently, behavioral activation has been ..., C.W. 2006 . Behavioral Activation for Anxiety Disorders. The Behavior Analyst Today , 7 2 , 212 ... of Behavioral Activation Treatment on Fibromyalgia Related Pain Anxiety and Cognition journal International ... more details
In the behaviorism approach to psychology, behavioral scripts are a sequence of expected behaviors for a given situation. ref name Barnett06 Barnett, D.W. et. al. 2006 . Preschool Intervention Scripts Lessons from 20 years of Research and Practice. Journal of Speech Language Pathology and Applied Behavior Analysis , 2 2 , 158 181 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref For example, when an individual enters a restaurant they choose a table, order, wait, eat, pay the bill, and leave. People continually follow scripts which are acquired through habit, practice and simple routine . Following scripts is useful because it saves the time and mental effort of figuring out an appropriate behavior each time a situation is encountered. Psychology American and Chinese social structure encourages a strong degree of behavioral scripts to be utilized within everyday interactions with others, and sociocultural norms dictate that humans utilize behavioral scripts. Some people may have a tendency to habituate behavioral scripts in a manner that can act to limit consciousness in a subliminal manner, which can negatively influence or affect the subconscious mind, and subsequently negatively affect perceptions, judgments, values, beliefs, cognition and behavior . For example, over reliance upon behavioral scripts combined with Norm sociology social norms that encourage people to utilize behavioral scripts may encourage people to stereotype others based on socioeconomic status , ethnicity, race, etc., and then subsequently develop prejudice toward other people that becomes subconsciously psychologically habituated and then manifested into personal behavioral scripts. Some applied behavior analysts use scripts to train new skills. ref name Barnett06 Some 20 years of research supports it as an effective way to build new language, social, and activity routines for adults and children with developmental ... Psychology Notes Reflist DEFAULTSORT Behavioral Script Category Behaviorism psych stub it Script ... more details
Behavioral geography is an approach to human geography that examines human behavior using a disaggregate approach. Behavioral geographers focus on the cognitive process es underlying spatial reasoning , decision making , and behavior . In addition, behavioral geography is an ideology approach in human geography that makes use of the methods and assumptions of behaviorism to determine the cognitive processes involved in an individual s perception of, and or response and reaction to their environment. Behavioral geography is that branch of human science, which deals with the study of cognitive processes with its response to its environment, through behaviorism. Issues in behavioral geography Because of the name it is often assumed to have its roots in behaviorism . While some behavioral geographers clearly have roots in behaviorism ref name Norton01 Norton, W. 2001 . Initiating an affair human geography and behavior analysis . The Behavior Analyst Today , 2 4 , 283 290 http www.baojournal.com ref ref name Norton02 Norton, W. 2002 Explaining Landscape Change Group Identity and Behavior. The Behavior Analyst Today , 3 2 , 155 160 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref due to the emphasis on cognition, most can be seen as cognitively oriented. Indeed, it seems that behaviorism interest is more recent ref name Glass07 Glass, J.E. 2007 . Behavior analytic grounding of sociological social constructionism . The Behavior Analyst Today , 8 4 , 426 433 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref and growing. ref name Norton01 This is particularly true in the area of human landscaping. Behavioral geography is an approach to human geography that examines human behavior using a disaggregate approach. It draws ..., behavioral geographers focus on the cognitive processes underlying spatial reasoning, decision ... based on imperfect knowledge of one s environs, and numerous other topics. The approach adopted in behavioral ..., and many others. References reflist Human geography DEFAULTSORT Behavioral Geography Category ... more details
Cleanup jargon date February 2011 technical date February 2011 Behavioral targeting or behavioural targeting ... the effectiveness of their campaigns. Behavioral targeting uses information collected on an individual ... deliver their online advertisements to the users who are most likely to be interested. Behavioral ... geography, demographics or the surrounding content. Behavioral targeting allows site owners or ad ... for these over random advertising or ads based on the context of a site. Onsite behavioral targeting Behavioral targeting techniques may also be applied to any online property on the premise that it either ... this is usually achieved by either using a specialist content behavioral platform or by bespoke software ..., the platform then makes a rules based decision about what content to serve. Again, behavioral data ... in the targeting. Self learning onsite behavioral targeting systems will monitor visitor ... conversion event . Some good content for each behavioral trait or pattern is often established using numerous simultaneous Multivariate testing multivariate tests . Onsite behavioral targeting requires ... of a particular offer generating a conversion from a user with a set behavioral profile ... with particular traits. Network behavioral targeting Advertising network Advertising Networks use behavioral targeting in a different way to individual sites. Since they serve many adverts across ... audiences rather than sites. ref iMedia Connection article on Behavioral Targeting for Networks in the USA ... this product, this was based on picking the sites where the audiences were. Behavioral targeting ... are concerned about privacy issues around doing this type of targeting. This is a controversy that the behavioral ... from end users. ref cite news url http www.seoserpent.com 2008 09 isp behavioral targeting title ISP Behavioral Targeting versus You date 2008 09 26 ref AOL created animated cartoons in 2008 to explain ... , profiling and behavioral targeting, and is looking for enforcing existing regulation . ref http ... more details
Behavioral psychotherapy is one of two streams of thought the other being cognitive therapy cognitive psychotherapy that have come together to produce cognitive behavioral therapy . Behavioral psychotherapy has a rich tradition in research and practice. From a purely behavioral perspective, behavior ... forms Behavioral therapy based on operant and respondent principles has considerable evidence base ... analysis . Behavioral psychotherapy has become increasingly contextual in recent years ref Patrick ... of PTSD A Review. IJBCT,1 3 , 223 238 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref Behavioral psychotherapy ... Disorders Implications for Behavioral Case Formulation and Therapy. IJBCT, 1 1 , Page 56 65 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref One current form of behavioral psychotherapy is Functional analytic psychotherapy ... of the behavioral psychotherapies, functional analytic psychotherapy is contextual in its origins ... compared to traditional behavior therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy ref Gifford, E. 2002 Socrates ... for behavioral psychologists to be involved in rehabilitation efforts ref Gregory C. Murphy & Neville ... , 273 283 http wwwbaojournal.com BAO ref Supervision Recent efforts in behavioral psychotherapy have ... of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 2 1 12 16 http www.baojournal.com BAO ref A key point of behavioral models of supervision is that the supervisory process parallel the behavioral psychotherapy ... has a special interest group for practitioner issues, behavioral counseling, and clinical behavior ... larger special interest groups for autism and behavioral medicine . Association for behavior analysis ... for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies ABCT also has an interest group in behavior analysis , which focuses on clinical behavior analysis. In addition, the Association for Behavioral an Cogntive ... offers a diplomate in behavioral psychology. World center for behavior analysis offers a certification ... analysis Professional practice of behavior analysis DEFAULTSORT Behavioral Psychotherapy Category ... more details
Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Behavioral Problems Type studio Artist Ron White Cover BehavioralProblems.jpg Released start date 2009 04 21 Recorded Genre Comedy Length Label Capitol Records Capitol Producer Last album You Can t Fix Stupid br 2006 This album Behavioral Problems br 2009 Next album Album ratings rev1 Allmusic rev1Score Rating 3.5 5 ref name allmusic cite web last Jeffries first David title Behavioral Problems review url Allmusic class album id behavioral problems r1539661 review pure url yes work Allmusic accessdate 6 March 2011 ref Behavioral Problems is an album by American comedian Ron White . It was released by Capitol Records on April 21, 2009. The album peaked at number 1 on the Billboard magazine Billboard Top Comedy Albums chart. ref cite web title Behavioral Problems Charts url Allmusic class album id behavioral problems r1539661 charts awards pure url yes work Allmusic accessdate 6 March 2011 ref Track listing Intro 0 50 Oscillate 2 22 No Dogs Allowed 1 08 Don t Shake a Baby 2 15 Got in a Little Trouble 4 53 Lawyers and Dentists 10 29 Tater Tot Goes to Europe 4 35 Implants 1 02 It s a Busy Couch 0 57 The Town Stinks 3 03 I Love This Country 0 40 UFO Tour 1 04 To the Troops 1 33 Man Bag 1 31 Heightened State of Awareness 5 58 I Have a Great Idea 3 51 The List 0 58 Monogamy 2 19 The Lazy Dog 2 25 Not a Lot of People Know 0 47 Pedicure 1 43 All Things Scotch 0 51 Take Me to the Liquor Store 1 06 Tourette s 2 35 Secret Pleasure Zone 3 53 A I 1 37 Piercing 2 01 It Whistles 1 06 NASA Research 1 14 Chart performance class wikitable Chart 2009 Peak br position U.S. Billboard Top Comedy Albums align center 1 U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums align center 13 U.S. Billboard 200 align center 51 References reflist Category 2009 albums Category Ron White albums Category Capitol Records albums ... more details
A behavioral cusp is any behavior change that brings an organism s behavior into contact with new contingencies that have far reaching consequences. ref name rosales97 A behavioral cusp is a special type ... psychology, because it provides a behavioral alternative to the concept of maturation ..., M.D. 2004 . The Final Piece to a Complete Science of Behavior Behavior Development and Behavioral ... was to link behavioral principles to rapid spurts in development see Behavior analysis of child development A behavioral cusp as conceptualized by Jesus Rosales Ruiz & Donald Baer in 1997 is an important ... last Rosales Ruiz first J last2 Baer first2 D.M. year 1997 chapter Behavioral cusps a developmental ... pages 533 544 url http www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov pmc articles PMC1284066 pdf 9316263.pdf ref The behavioral ... response or a group of related responses, the effects of a behavioral cusp regulate a large number ... milestone because is not a necessary skill in most environments. Properties of a behavioral cusp The following properties are special features of a behavioral change that lead to more change .... ref Bosch, S., Fuqua, R.W. 2001 . Behavioral cusps a model for selecting target behaviors ... initiated, so profoundly alters, displaces, or transforms one s behavioral repertoire that it renders preexisting behavioral repertoires obsolete. A behavioral cusp is an important behavior change ... be learned. Applications Life span development guidelines The behavioral cusp has implications ... with the chronology of behaviors, the concept of behavioral cusp is concerned with the fitness of the behavior ... Behavioral Medicine Disease prevention Healthy Life Style Cost Analysis Future research Future research ... The final piece to a complete science of behavior behavior development and behavioral cusps title The Behavior ... first M.D. year 2004 chapter Behavioral cusps, basic behavioral repertoires, and cumulative hierarchical ... parameters proposed by Rosales Ruiz, Baer, Bosch, & Fuqua provides justifications for behavioral ... more details
Orphan date April 2010 Behavioral Clustering is a statistical analysis method used in retail ing to identify consumer purchase trends and group stores based on consumer buying behaviors. Traditional Clustering vs Behavioral Clustering Traditional Clustering Historically, retailer s and manufacturer s have grouped stores based on top down constraints such as store size, total store sales volume, retail banner or supply chain requirements to ensure the chain is operating efficiently. In other cases, a strategy to group stores into common demographic or geographic clusters is followed. The major benefit to using a top down traditional approach is that, by using averages to group stores, it ensures the chain is operating at maximum efficiency . The risk when using this approach is in not meeting localized demand on a store by store basis, resulting in a potential loss in sales. Behavioral Clustering When performing Behavioral Clustering, store clusters are formed based on analyzing the actual performance e.g. sales dollars, units sold of items, categories or departments, in every store within a chain store network . This approach enables store groups to be created based on actual consumer buying behaviors. After placing each store in a cluster, individual consumer centric strategies can then be created to facilitate targeted marketing , advertising , merchandising , pricing and promotion plans. In addition, once store groups are formed, retailers and manufactures are able to analyze the resulting store clusters to identify demographic, psychographic or geographic similarities. For instance, analysis of one group of stores may highlight that they are all located in a similar geographic location in the Northeast or near large population centers or that a particular demographic ... within the store. The major benefit to using a bottom up behavioral clustering approach is that it enables ... are established. The key to behavioral clustering is to find the right balance of localization ... more details
Behavioral economics and its related area of study, behavioral finance , use social, cognitive bias cognitive ..., self control of homo economicus economic agent s. Behavioral model s typically integrate insights from psychology with neo classical economics neo classical economic theory . Behavioral analysts ... of generalized expected utility theory. Although not a conventional part of behavioral economics ... a special behavioral economics edition of the Quarterly Journal of Economics In Memory of Amos Tversky ... prizes lists 2002.html accessdate 2008 04 25 ref Intertemporal choice Behavioral economics has also .... Other areas of research Other branches of behavioral economics enrich the model of the utility function ... year 1992 pmid 1473331 ref Behavioral economics caught on among the general public, with the success ... expert who also works in behavioral economics date July 1, 2009 url http www.muninetworks.org reports ... Methodology Behavioral economics and finance theories developed almost exclusively from experimental ... and real money. Vs experimental economics Note that behavioral economics is distinct from experimental ... as beta testing for new market mechanisms. And not all behavioral economics uses experiments behavioral ... themes predominate in behavioral finance and economics ref name shefrin harvnb Shefrin 2002 ref ... market anomalies from a behavioral perspective. Barberis, Shleifer, and Vishny ref name barberis ... such as Herd behavior herding and groupthink . Behavioral finance and economics rests as much on social psychology within large groups as on individual psychology. In some behavioral models, a small ... date April 2008 Topics Models in behavioral economics typically address a particular market anomaly ... Fat tail s Calendar effect ref name daniel Criticisms and support Critics of behavioral economics ... economists are also skeptical of the experimental and survey based techniques which behavioral economics ... insight. Behavioral economists have also responded to these criticisms by focusing on field studies ... more details
Behavioral retargeting also known as behavioral remarketing , or simply, retargeting is a form of online targeted advertising by which online advertising is delivered to consumers based on previous Internet actions that did not in the past result in a Conversion marketing conversion in other words, the actions intended by the site owner, which typically include subscribing to an email list, registering for membership with a website, and or making a purchase . ref cite web url http publications.mediapost.com index.cfm?fuseaction Articles.showArticleHomePage&art aid 44145 publisher Search Insider title To Recoup Click through Losses, Redirect date 2006 06 05 ref Retargeting practices Some companies specialize in retargeting. Other companies have added retargeting to their list of methods of purchasing advertising. ref cite news date 2006 07 06 title Behavioral Retargeting 101 author Isaac Scarborough publisher iMedia Connection url http www.imediaconnection.com content 10276.asp ref Retargeting helps companies advertise to website visitors who leave without a conversion about 98 of all web traffic. This is done by displaying ads to the prospect as they surf the internet via various ad networks that the agency buys media from on behalf of their Business Customers. Retargeting is only serving banner ads to people who have shown at least some amount of engagement in your brand. This makes retargeting a smarter spend than most other display ad campaigns as it focuses on your brand s engaged userbase. ref cite news date 2010 05 17 title What Is Retargeting and How Does It Work? author ... in a different manner. Search retargeting , a form of behavioral retargeting, can also be leveraged ... to continue the marketing conversation with a customer after they leave a website. This form of behavioral ... practice, differs from Behavioral Retargeting as it allows an advertiser to display a banner ... Criteo url http www.criteo.com us retargeting how targeted advertising works ref See also Behavioral ... more details
neuroscience , Cognitive neuroscience , and Social neuroscience . Behavioral neuroscience , also ... dp 0878937544 Biological Psychology An Introduction to Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience ... that underlie normal and abnormal behavior. Most typically experiments in behavioral neuroscience ... . History The study of behavioral neuroscience dates back to Avicenna 980 1037 , a Islamic psychology ... and Health 43 4 357 377 366 . ref Behavioral neuroscience as a scientific discipline later .... The emergence of both psychology and behavioral neuroscience as legitimate sciences can be traced ... the field of behavioral neuroscience even in its modern sense. ref name Dewsbury Relationship to other fields of psychology and biology In many cases, humans may serve as experimental subjects in behavioral neuroscience experiments however, a great deal of the experimental literature in behavioral ..., a critical assumption in behavioral neuroscience is that organisms share biological and behavioral similarities, enough to permit extrapolations across species. This allies behavioral neuroscience ... . Behavioral neuroscience also has paradigmatic and methodological similarities to neuropsychology ... i.e., a non experimentally based biological manipulation . Synonyms for behavioral neuroscience include biopsychology, behavioral neuroscience, and psychobiology. ref S. Marc Breedlove , Mark Rosenzweig and Neil V. Watson 2007 . Biological Psychology An Introduction to Behavioral and Cognitive ... often used synonymously with behavioral neuroscience, though authors would make physiological psychology a subfield of behavioral neuroscience, with an appropriately narrow definition. Research methods The distinguishing characteristic of a behavioral neuroscience experiment is that either the independent ... aspect of the nervous system is measured usually to be related to a behavioral variable . Disabling ... behavioral measure. Lesions can be placed with relatively high accuracy thanks to a variety of brain ... more details
Orphan date March 2011 Behavioral contagion is the propensity for certain behavior exhibited by one person to be copied by others either in the vicinity of the original user, or who have been exposed to media coverage describing the behavior of the original actor. Examples of behavioral contagion include Copycat crimes , crimes inspired by or replicating another crime Copycat suicide , suicide inspired by or replicating another s suicide Contagious shooting , wherein the initiation of gunfire by one member of a group causes other members to fire their weapons. yawning , where one person yawns in response to seeing or hearing another person yawn. tongue protrusion , an infant will immediately after birth protrude tongue in response to seeing another protrude a tongue. mouth opening , an infant will open his or her mouth wide open in response to seeing another open mouth has been demonstrated 10 minutes after birth and may be a primitive grimace atavism. Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Longcomment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. Category Human behavior psychology stub ... more details
Behavioral momentum is a theory in quantitative analysis of behavior and is a comparative metaphor based ... previously has resulted in a consequence in its presence. Resistance to change According to behavioral ... governs the resistance of the behavior class to behavioral operations such as implementing an extinction ..., 1966, for a discussion . According to behavioral momentum theory, the relation between response rates ... to that force and inversely related to the object s mass. Similarly, behavioral momentum theory states ... rate. Consistent with behavioral momentum theory, resistance to disruption often has been ... with behavioral momentum theory, resistance to presession feeding satiation and discontinuing reinforcement ..., 2008 , and humans Ahearn, Clark, Gardenier, Chung, & Dube, 2003 Cohen, 1996 Mace et al., 1990 . The behavioral ... behavioral momentum theory is a powerful framework for understanding how a context of reinforcement ... stimulus contexts is analogous to the inertial mass of a moving object, behavioral momentum theory ... link context over the other. Moreover, behavioral momentum theory posits that preference provides ..., or more generally, behavioral mass of discriminated operant behavior see Nevin & Grace, 2000 . References ... of behavioral momentum and academic achievement for students with behavior disorders Theory, application ... variable interval schedules. Animal Learning & Behavior , 30, 34 42. Cohen, S. L. 1996 . Behavioral ... 51. Dube, W.V., Ahearn, W.H, Lionello DeNolf, K. and McIlvane, W.J. 2009 . Behavioral Momentum Translational ..., 247 261. Harper, D. N. 1999a . Behavioral resistance to haloperidol and clozapine. Behavioral Processes ... . Resistance to change in goldfish. Behavioral Processes , 66, 139 152. Jimenez Gomez, C., & Shahan ... , 21, 389 408. Nevin, J. A. 1992 . An integrative model for the study of behavioral momentum. Journal ... , 25, 256 268. Nevin, J. A., & Grace, R. C. 2000a . Behavioral momentum and the Law of Effect. Behavioral and Brain Sciences , 23, 73 130. Nevin, J. A., Grace, R. C., Holland, S., & McLean, A. P ... more details
Cleanup date February 2008 Behavioral engineering is intended to identify issues associated with the interface of technology and the human operators in a system and to generate recommended design practices that consider the strengths and limitations of the human operators. quote The behavior of the individual has been shaped according to revelations of good conduct never as the result of experimental study. B.F Skinner Walden Two Watson wrote in 1924 Behaviorism ... holds that the subject matter of human psychology is the behavior of the human being. Behaviorism claims that consciousness is neither a definite nor a usable concept. ref Watson, J.B. 1924 Behaviorism ref This approach is often used in organizational behavior management, which is behavior analysis applied to organizations and behavioral community psychology. Success of approach Behavioral engineering has been used to increase safety in organizations see Behavior based safety . ref Alavosius, M.P., & Sulzer Azaroff, B. 1985 An on the job method to evaluate patient lifting techniques. Applied Ergonomics , 16 4 , pp. 307 311. ref ref Alavosius, M.P., & Sulzer Azaroff, B. 1990 Acquisition and maintenance of health care routines ... Behavioral Safety Meeting the Challenge of Making a Large Scale Difference. The Behavior Analyst ..., MA Cambridge Center For Behavioral Studies. ref and developing the human landscape, ref Noron ... Azaroff, B. 1984 A behavioral analysis of goal setting. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management ... BAO ref Behavioral engineering has also been applied to social welfare policy. ref Nackerud, L., Waller ... system behavioral engineering has inspired two programs of behavior management based on the principles ... to Learn. Child and Youth Services , v8 n1 2 pp. 137 46 ref The journal Behavioral Engineering was published from 1973 1985. Many of the topics of behavioral engineering are now covered in the journal ... analysis References reflist 2 Category Behaviorism Category Behavioral concepts Category Applied psychology ... more details